James Berry (poet)


James Berry, OBE, Hon FRSL, was a black Jamaican poet who settled in England in the 1940s. His poetry is notable for using a mixture of standard English and Jamaican Patois. Berry's writing often "explores the relationship between black and white communities and in particular, the excitement and tensions in the evolving relationship of the Caribbean immigrants with Britain and British society from the 1940s onwards". As the editor of two seminal anthologies, Bluefoot Traveller and News for Babylon, he was in the forefront of championing West Indian/British writing.

Biography

The son of Robert Berry, a smallholder, and his wife Maud, a seamstress, James Berry was born and grew up in rural Portland, Jamaica. He began writing stories and poems while still at school. During the Second World War, as a teenager, he went to work for six years in the United States, before returning to Jamaica. In his own words:
Settling in 1948 in Great Britain, he attended night school, trained and worked as a telegrapher in London, while also writing. He has been reported as saying: "I knew I was right for London and London was right for me. London had books and accessible libraries."
He became an early member of the Caribbean Artists Movement, founded in 1966 by Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Andrew Salkey and John La Rose, and in 1971 was its acting chair. In 1976 Berry compiled the anthology Bluefoot Traveller and in 1979 his first poetry collection, Fractured Circles, was published by New Beacon Books. In 1981 he won the Poetry Society's National Poetry Competition, the first poet of West Indian origin to do so. He edited the landmark anthology News for Babylon, considered "a ground-breaking publication because its publishing house Chatto & Windus was 'mainstream' and distinguished for its international poetry list".
Berry wrote many books for young readers, including A Thief in the Village and Other Stories, The Girls and Yanga Marshall, The Future-Telling Lady and Other Stories, Anancy-Spiderman, Don't Leave an Elephant to Go and Chase a Bird and First Palm Trees.
His last book of poetry, A Story I Am In: Selected Poems, draws on five earlier collections: Fractured Circles, Lucy’s Letters and Loving, Hot Earth Cold Earth and Windrush Songs.
In 1995, his "Song of a Blue Foot Man" was adapted and staged at the Watford Palace Theatre.
In 1990, Berry was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for services to poetry. In September 2004 he was one of fifty Black and Asian writers who have made major contributions to contemporary British literature who featured in the historic "A Great Day in London" photograph at the British Library. His archives were acquired by the British Library in October 2012. Among other items, the archive contains drafts of an unpublished novel, The Domain of Sollo and Sport.
He died in London on 20 June 2017 after suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

Selected publications